The Enterprise of Law: Justice without the State

Bruce L. Benson\'s \"The Enterprise of Law: Justice Without the State\"
The Mises Institute now has Bruce L. Benson’s “The Enterprise of Law: Justice without the State” back in print and available for order. This might be perhaps the ultimate book (so far) on the specific topic of legal theory in a stateless society (anarchy).

Who would question the need for the state to provide and enforce law? Bruce Benson, that’s who. A professor of economics at Florida State University, this is Benson’s blockbuster, pioneering treatise, the one that broke up a completely new field study and forced the rethinking of this entire sector.

Benson argues that public dissatisfaction with legal institutions is as prevalent as public disgust with many public institutions. That’s hardly surprising. They are funded through taxes, run by bureaucracies, are famously inefficient, lack the capacity to calculate economically, and ignore the demands of consumers.

So is there another way? Yes, and here is where Benson shocks: he wants complete privatization. He says that private-sector institutions are capable of establishing strong incentives that lead to effective law making and law enforcement. The resulting legal constraints facilitate interaction and support social order by inducing cooperation and reducing violent confrontation.

Doubt it? Consider the rise of private firms offering protection and detective services, the explosion in private arbitration, the lucrative business in alarm services, and use of private police in malls and subdivisions. We must also consider the body of private law that has emerged within many associations and business sectors. The market is capable of doing this!

But can it do a better job than the state? The waiting time for trial can’t be longer. The jails are corrupt and ineffective. The law-making function of the state is egregious and corrupt in every way. From a comparative institutions perspective, state-based law services are shoddy and unworkable whereas market-based institutions are efficient and consumer-friendly.

The great merit of this Benson book is to prove these propositions a thousand times – using history, theory, and modern political analysis — and to come up with the first full theoretical model for understanding them. In one way, his analysis is commendably plain: he is merely apply market logic to law. In another way, it is revolutionary because no one else in history has ever does so with more rigor and energy, so much so, in fact, that you will never think of the primary “duty” of the state in the same way.

The book came out in 1990, had an explosive impact on libertarian scholars, and then went out of print. The Mises Institute is very pleased to have played the decisive role in bringing this wonderful book back into print and back into public availability. And for only $15 for 400 pages! It’s never been more needed.

* Customary Legal Systems with Voluntary Enforcement
* The Rise of Authoritarian Law
* Law and Justice as a Political Market
* The Demands Side of the Political Market
* The Supply Side of the Political Market
* Corruption of Law Enforcement Officials
* Contracting Out for Law and Justice
* Current Trends in Privatization
* Benefits of Privatization
* Market Failure in Law and Justice
* The Legal Monopoly on Coercion
* Political Barriers to Privatization
* Envisioning a Private System

Fasten your seatbelts. You are in for a wild ride.

Get it.

SPONSORED POST: search engine marketing firm, car insurance quote, options trading

Google has begun testing their accessible web search for the visually impaired. One search engine marketing firm, USWeb, is particularly well poised to adapt to this. The number one Google search result for “online marketing” is USWeb. On Google Accessible Search, the number one result for “online marketing” is also, you guessed it, USWeb.

Looking for a car insurance quote? CarInsurance.com makes it easy to buy your auto insurance online. In some states you could complete the process and have your proof of insurance in 15 minutes! Their site is easy to use and their stated goal is to show you how much you can save with their services.

Are you holding stocks that don’t pay dividends? Don’t leave money on the table. Those stocks can be put to use in options trading. One strategy is to sell “at-the-money” or “out-of-the-money” calls on your stocks (Covered Calls). This means the strike (expiration) price of the option is at or above the current stock price. If you set the strike price so high the stock doesn’t reach that price, you keep your stock.

The anti-filter filter…

Former libertarian blog syndication site LibertyFilter.com has instead been re-conceived as a means of circumventing web filtering restrictions.

Enter the URL of the web page you want to read plus your email address and LibertyFilter.com will e-mail it to you.

Hat tip to: Ghetto Puppet.

KC Activists Takeover Local Gas Stations

Congratulations to Kansas City SDS and Code Pink for a job well done. Via e-mail from Kansas City SDS:

On Friday July 21 activists participating in a CodePink-initiated action (including local SDS members) took over three local gas stations during rush hour traffic to highlight the connection between oil consumption and American imperial policy in waging the war on the Iraqi people. Participants “shut down” the stations, telling customers the stations were closed for the day.

Fifteen participants, half on bicycle, travelled along Westport Road, stopping at three major gas stations. At each gas station, those on bicycle circled around, eventually stopping in front of the gas pumps, and placing pink “out of order” signs on them. Others passed out flyers explaining the need for the action. The speed and mobility granted by bicycle transportationa allowed the activists to stop at each station for a brief time, then moving on to the next station.

The action was highly successful in terms of providing information and shutting down strategic targets related to the war machine.

There was one arrest made as a result of the action. At the first gas station the contingent visited, an angry witness was attempting to strip an activist’s megaphone away from her, assaulting her in the process. Another activist, who was quietly taking pictures of the attack. The person attacking the activist approached the camera-holder, in the process assaulting him as well and destroying his camera.

After the action was over, the person who had attacked two activists took the police to the first person he had attacked, having told them that she had assaulted him and not-as all parties present can attest-the other way around. She was placed in a police wagon and arrested on ironically-imposed assault charges. Hours later, she was released. It is important that we support this activist-attacked by an irate witness and then falsely-accused of having assaulted him-in her defense.

In addition, the police also briefly detained one activist who was urging others to leave once the police showed up at the third and final gas station, but allowed her to leave.

This energetic and innovative action was not only a success, it was exciting and unlike any action in Kansas City in recent history.

UPDATE: CodePinkKC’s site has blog entries and comment/trackback capability. Their posts on the gas station action are here and here.

Dulce et decorum est

Left libertarian blogger and Molinari Institute Director / Research Fellow Charles Johnson, a.k.a. RadGeek, yesterday announced a new weblog named Dulce et decorum est. It’s purpose is to collect “anti-war cultural artefacts, both historical and contemporary.

Las Vegas: feeding the homeless outlawed

I’m far more than thoroughly disgusted by the Las Vegas City Council’s passage of an ordinance outlawing feeding the homeless. It’s bad enough that government, in so many ways, causes both the material poverty and the spiritual poverty that results in the homelessness problem. Now they’ve stooped to outlawing private compassion towards their victims. One can stand for the human race, or government, but not both. We might as well be the survivors being hunted down by the machines in the future of the Terminator movies.


Cross-posted to: Axes Grinding

Followup on Newt’s “World War III” ploy

Left libertarian blogger and big, angry negro b psycho had perhaps the pithiest short take on Newt Gingrich’s “WW III” political ploy that I discussed yesterday:

-Newt Gingrich: “It’s World War 3!!” Brad Spangler: “You’re jumpin the gun, porky. Don’t splooge yourself yet.”

Newt: “But…it’s World War 3!!!” Glenn Greenwald: “If Bill Kristol & co don’t STFU it will be…”

I decided to do a short followup on this today because it’s a key matter in my opinion. What I should have stressed more is this: these warmongering nutjobs have shown via their “premature wargasm” hype they WANT World War Three.

Let me repeat that for you slow learners out there…

Newt Gingrich and the faction he represents actively want to achieve World War Three — so much so, that they’re willing to label a conflict that prematurely in hopes of expanding that conflict in such a way that it might truly become World War Three — for the sake of their own political advantage.

This is not a controversial political position. This is pure insanity and premeditated, monstrous mass murder that will surely result in the deaths of untold numbers of Americans and others if Newt gets his wish.

Keep talking Newt. The more you say, the more clear it will become to Americans that the people of this country will have to rise up in self-defense and resistance against war if they don’t want you crazy fuckers to destroy the world. As Danny Schechter notes:

“There are screws loose in high places.”

SPONSORED POST: Elton John: flowers but no greenery

Reportedly, pop music star Elton John has banned foliage on the large quantities of flowers he orders for himself — no greenery at all, remove all of the leaves and hide the stems. Doesn’t that seem a little oddly picky?

Now, obviously, Elton John ought to be able to spend his own money as he sees fit. It is worth noting, however, that he spends what seems like a heck of a lot of it on flowers — reportedly circa 10,000 British pounds monthly. Furthermore, I have to admit that his flower thing seems puzzling to me. In economic terms, value is subjective and we are all unique individuals with our own tastes and priorities. But, come on — WTF?

I understand that the unique vision of any artist, including musicians, is going to seem odd to an arguably ordinary guy like me. Entertainers specialize in the creation of novelty. The quirky tastes that go with that mindset are part of what makes him who he is. Also, it’s not like he’s uncompassionate toward the poor. Elton John was, last year, reported to be the single biggest contributor to charity in the entire music industry.

Even so, I just can’t relate. The guy might as well be an extraterrestrial.

Why it’s NOT World War III — yet

Newt Gingrich can barely contain his glee as he unfurls the newest GOP political strategy — pointing to all of the problems the US government has caused and calling it “World War III”. I’m reminded of an old saying in the military for describing proceeding with questionable initiatives: “Run it up the flag pole and see who salutes.”

Newt is full of crap. The World Wars were conflicts between the major powers of that era. I believe this situation could easily become World War three — but it would require the fighting entry of at least one major power in opposition to the US government for that term to be applied accurately.

Russia and China aren’t going to do a heck of a lot unless they get in a situation where they believe they have little other choice. There go the prime candidates. They know Bush is spoiling for a fight.

The EU is, well, there. India is arguably US-aligned. A confederation of Latin American nations under Mexican, Brazilian or Argentinian leadership might qualify as a great power, I suppose — but I don’t see that taking shape very soon. There’s an anti-US government drift in Latin American politics, but nothing of those proportions.

The Israelis rolling tanks doesn’t magically transform a “War on Terror”, that the American public is gradually coming to see as a farce, into “World War III” overnight — the wet dreams of Republican strategists notwithstanding.

I’ll call it WW III when the neocons succeed in provoking (or backing into a corner) the Russians and/or the Chinese. Prior to that point, I see baby boomers with an urge to be like Daddy and have their very OWN “Great War”. The premature use of the term is hype and a twisted example of wishful thinking on the part of a cynical political class.

As Paul Craig Roberts puts it: “We’re being set up…”

Site highlight: Voline

I’ve had a link to “Voline: an anarchist forum” on the blogroll for several months, but I’d like to go ahead and plug the site again. Voline is described as “…a forum for all aspects of anarchism”.

This is the conversation we need to be a part of, folks — courteously and respectfully with our real comrades. It is my view that market anarchists need to abandon alliances with arrogant, unappreciative minarchists and other reformists in which we will always be no better than “junior partners”, provided we shut up and pretend to be minarchists.

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